families in the 60s
TRANSCRIPT
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T1960s Family
1960sBackdrop
Backdrop
he decade of the 1960s was one of turmoil and change. Thecountry was jolted by the assassinations of one president, twocivil rights leaders, and one presidential aspirant.1 Nuclear warwas barely averted.2 The country was less willing to toleratesocial inequities, and majorlegislation was passed to initi-ate change. Women’s salarieswere woefully below men’s inevery occupation; this wasaddressed by the Equal PayAct of 1963, although 40years later women’s salariesstill lagged behind men’s inmost fields.3 The Civil RightsAct of 1964 addressed dis-crimination in employment,lodging, and schooling on thebasis of race, color, religion,sex, or national origin.As the decade wore on, the war in Vietnambecame increasingly contentious, with protest marches growingin frequency and participation. The birth of the Internet passedunnoticed by all but a handful of scientists. At the beginning ofthe decade, one man orbited the earth, and at the end, two menwalked on the moon.4
A protest at the University of California-Berkeley during a time of turmoil
1960s Family
2
Despite the social upheaval, the 1960s were a time
of increasing economic affluence. Inflation-adjusted
per capita disposable income increased by 36 percent
over the decade. Women’s participation in the work-
force rose from 38 percent to 43 percent.5 Unemployment fell steadily throughout
the decade, declining from 5.5 percent in 1960 to 3.5 percent in 1969.6 The intro-
duction of Medicare in the mid 1960s provided health care coverage to all senior
citizens.
As historian Ruth Schwartz Cowan states in More Work for Mother, “By 1960
the numbers of Americans who could afford to live at a ‘decent’ and ‘healthful’
standard of living had become the average American; decency, cleanliness, rudi-
mentary nutrition, and rudimentary healthfulness were no longer the privileges
of the elite. The minimum subsistence budget that was used to determine welfare
payments in New York City in 1960 would have been regarded as luxurious in
1910 or in 1930. A four-person family was permitted to rent a five-room flat so
that each member could be ‘alone in a room’ — a luxury inconceivable earlier in
the century. The flat was to be outfitted with a complete bathroom (hot and cold
running water), a complete kitchen (. . . refrigerator, gas or electric range), and
central heat. The diet . . . was not to contain luxurious foods such as steak, but did
allow meat, milk, fresh fruits, and vegetables to be served at least once a day. “7
Our “Average” Familyand Their Home
Our hypothetical fami-
ly lives in a suburb of
Hartford, Connecticut.
Suburbs boom as cars make
it possible for people to live
at greater distances from
their place of work. Our
family reflects the trend
toward smaller families —
an average of four people8
— and larger homes.
Backyard BBQCourtesy of Advanced AutoParts, Inc.
1960sThe Average Family There is more leisure time for familes in the 1960s.
3
Family members include father, mother,
a teenaged son, and a 12-year-old
daughter. Our family’s 1,150-square-
foot house is part of a development built
in 1960 on what was formerly a large
farm. Each house sits on its own half-
acre lot and differs from its neighbors
only in exterior color and landscaping.
The word “household” now means
the nuclear family. Grandparents or rel-
atives may come for short visits, but not extended stays. And paying “boarders”
are uncommon in the suburbs, unlike during the 1810s or the 1890s.
More space (living, storage, and outdoor) and modern appliances and con-
veniences characterize the 1960s home versus those of previous eras. Our family’s
home has an open floor plan with a “command post” style kitchen and dining
area. This layout — kitchen and dining/living area separated by a galley —
allows mother to work in the kitchen “command post” while she interacts with
those in the dining/living area. Both children have their own bedrooms that are
jammed with clothes, “45s” and “LPs” (records9), stuffed animals, gadgets, books,
and sports equipment. Parents and kids share the full bathroom. There is also a
half bathroom off the kitchen. The garage is used for storage since the basement
has been made into a recreation room. The family car and the son’s “heap” sit in
the driveway.
Electricity powers the lights and household appliances, while a gas burner
provides warmth in the winter. Every home in the family’s suburb has heat, run-
ning water, and indoor plumbing.
Family Possessions
The family purchases virtually everything — food, home items, and clothing.
Many items that they buy are produced overseas, including Japanese electronics
equipment. Generally speaking, homemade items now showcase the skill of the
daughter, a hobbyist, and these are made for pleasure, not from necessity.
The family has all of the following labor saving devices: vacuum cleaner,
refrigerator, stove, iron, blender, toaster, electric frying pan, and washing
A 1960s Arbor Homes ranchstyle house and floor planCourtesy of Society for thePreservation of New EnglandAntiquities
1960sFamily Possessions
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machine. (Microwave ovens have just begun to be manufactured but are still out
of the financial reach of the family.) The family also saves on labor by using wrin-
kle and stain resistant materials as much as possible for their clothing, upholstery,
and carpeting. Many of their possessions are made of plastic — from toys to
toothbrushes to the drainpipes in their house. Like their neigh-
bors, the family has a nonstick Teflon® coated pan in their
kitchen.10
The family expects instant access to local, regional, nation-
al, and world news. The daily morning newspaper, The Hartford
Courant, keeps them abreast of local and New England events,
while the radio provides news flashes and entertainment. But
television — merging sound and imagery on a small screen in
the home — is the family’s preferred, exciting new method of
communication. While only 9 percent of U.S. households had a
TV in 1950, 87 percent have one in 1960.11 (By 1970 virtually
every household has a TV.12 Even in 1965, however, almost all
TVs were black and white. Color did not become affordable
until the early 1970s.13)
The family’s favorite prime-time television shows are three
sit-coms: The Lucy Show, I Dream of Jeannie, and The Beverly
Hillbillies. These are in sharp contrast with the tumultuous civil
rights and antiwar demonstrations in Washington DC, New
York City, and the South.
Television sets are still very expensive items. A large stationary Sears TV costs
$580 ($3,374 in today’s dollars); a portable TV costs $299 ($1,743 in today’s dol-
lars). By comparison, major household appliances, which can be categorized as
necessities not luxuries, are less expensive: electric range, $199 ($1,160 in today’s
dollars); refrigerator freezer, $259 ($1,510 in today’s dollars); two-speed automat-
ic washing machine, $189 ($1,100 in today’s dollars).14
Despite the popularity of television, the family still owns several radios. A
pocket-sized transistor radio, developed in the late 1950s, is a big hit with the fam-
ily’s teenaged son, who values its portability.
In addition to The Hartford Courant newspaper, the family subscribes to sever-
1960sFather
TV Week magazine cover featur-ing the popular television show“The Mod Squad.”Courtesy of TV Guide
5
al weekly and monthly magazines. Everyone looks forward to the
weekly edition of Life Magazine. Mother gets Good Housekeeping;
father, U.S. News and World Report. Mother picks up the weekly
TV Guide at the grocery store. On their birthdays, the son was
given a subscription to Sports Illustrated, and the daughter, to
Seventeen.15
Father
Father is a junior-level auto and casualty underwriter earning
$8,000 per year at an insurance company in downtown Hartford.
He carpools to work with three neighbors, leaving his wife home
with the car on most days. His workweek is officially 40 hours, but
occasionally he will stay late or work on a Saturday morning. The
management track he is on requires him to take college classes in
business administration, which he does at night school. So far, he
has completed one and a half years toward a bachelor of arts
degree. He is the first person in his family to take college level
classes. As time permits, he plans to continue his education, since
he is well aware that his studies have propelled his career and
increased his salary.16
Businesses are just starting to use computers. Father’s company is
one of the first insurance companies to purchase one, an IBM 1401,
which is used to calculate insurance premiums and automate certain payroll and
accounting functions. While father can see the results of the computer’s speedy
calculations, the machine seems mysterious, intimidating, and removed from his
day-to-day life. The computer has its own room — kept at a very low temperature
— and is worked on only by a select, highly trained group of people. The phrase
“user-friendly” will not come into existence for another two decades.
The most common way to find a job in the 1960s is through the “help want-
ed” section of a newspaper. Like other newspapers of the time, The Hartford
Courant categorizes jobs by gender. Women’s jobs are typically clerical/support
staff. Among the jobs advertised for women in 1963 are clerk typist ($1.50 to
$1.75/hour), secretarial with shorthand ($90 per week), accounts payable clerk
1960sFather
In a 1964 Atlantic Monthly
article, Professor Martin
Greenberger noted that over
20,000 computers were in
use in the United States. He
wondered what would hap-
pen in coming years. Had
computer usage reached a
plateau? To Professor
Greenberger, 20,000 comput-
ers seemed like a vast num-
ber. Would there be enough
data to compute?
Apparently so — the Census
Bureau reports that in the
year 2000, 54 million U.S.
households had one or more
computers for home use. In
1964, computers for home
use were nonexistent; uses
were strictly scientific and
business.
($70 per week), confidential secretary,
receptionist, advertising assistant, fashion
demonstrator, sales clerk, hostess ($90 per
week), cook, and gal Friday ($75 per
week). Women’s salaries are most often
stated in dollars per hour or week, while
men’s are in dollars per year. Men’s jobs
listed in the same newspaper include sales
trainee, bricklayer, auto parts manager,
delivery person, entry level chemist ($5,700 per year), industrial
salesman ($6,600 per year plus commission), and engineer
($10,000 per year).
Mother
Like 30 percent of married American women at the time,
mother spends some time working outside the home. Her pri-
mary job is housewife, but two mornings a week she works at a
dentist’s office doing secretarial work. She earns $1.75 per hour.17
Her main reason for working is to be able to buy “extras” for her
family and home, but she also enjoys getting out and being with
other adults.
Looking after the house, food shopping, meal preparation,
chauffeuring her daughter to lessons and friends’ homes after
school, cleaning, doing laundry, and her job keep mother very
busy. As Ruth Schwartz Cowan points out in More Work for
Mother, modern appliances definitely cut down on the drudgery
of housework, but a concomitant rise in standards of cleanliness
means that there is still a lot of work for mother to do.18 Since the
average housewife in the 1960s does not have outside help, car-
ing for the family and home consumes considerable time,
despite modern conveniences.
The S&H Green Stamp collecting frenzy is in full force in the
mid 1960s,19 and mother and her neighbors are enthusiastic par-
ticipants. They try to arrange grocery shopping on double and
6
1960sMother
Hartford Courant ad
S & H Green Stamps were very popular amonghomemakers.
7
triple stamp days. Now mother is just one book away from getting
either a new Corning Ware® casserole set or an electric frying pan.20
Son
Son is a senior in high school. He plans to attend the University
of Connecticut next year. He will be the first in his family to attend
college full time. His tuition, room, board, and expenses will be
$1,200 per year — equal to $6,620 in 2003 dollars.22
Son’s high school guidance counselor uses the newspaper want ads as a tool
to inspire students to think about their education and future. One exercise is to go
through the Sunday help wanted section and list the types of jobs, number of
times advertised, and pay. The next exercise is to find out what education and
other skills are necessary for those jobs. The son discovers that the want ads are
filled with jobs for different types of engineers. Since he is good in math, he is
thinking about electrical engineering as a possible college major.
Leisure Time
Each summer, the family drives
to New Hampshire for a week’s
vacation on the shores of Lake
Winnipesaukee. Since the time
when the kids were small, the fami-
ly has rented a cabin in a compound
with several other Hartford fami-
lies. While some of the families have
since moved away from Hartford,
everyone still goes on the annual
outing to New Hampshire.
During the school year the fam-
ily attends the high school football
games. In the summer, they enjoy backyard barbecues. In the winter, they enjoy
ice-skating together.
The daughter’s public school has “summer camp” programs that she attends
for several hours a day during the summer to enjoy crafts, play volleyball, and
learn to sew.
1960sSon
In 1964, the S&H cata-
log became the largest sin-
gle publication in the
United States. S&H printed
three times as many
stamps as the U.S. Post
Office and enough catalogs
to circle the earth one and
one-half times.21
Skating is one of many leisure activities families havetime for.Courtesy of The Boston Globe
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During the school year, the son works at a hardware store
stacking shelves, sweeping, cleaning, running errands, and, in
general, being helpful to the owner. He started saving most of
his earnings for college several years ago. He has used some of
this money, along with gifts from his parents and grandpar-
ents, to buy an old heap of a Chevy. Fixing up the car is one of
his chief sources of pleasure. His dream car, however, is a red
convertible GTO.
Endnotes
1 John F. Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963; Malcolm X, on February 21, 1965; Martin Luther KingJr., on April 4, 1968; and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., on June 4, 1968.
2 President John F. Kennedy and Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev faced off over missiles in Cuba during sever-al tense days in October 1962.
3 After hovering at about 60 percent since the mid 1950s, the ratio of women’s to men’s median pay began to risein the late 1970s. It reached about 70 percent by 1990 and 75 percent by 1997. The gap narrowed much faster foryounger women — perhaps because the younger women made choices similar to those of men and/or did not faceas much discrimination as the women before them. Explaining Trends in the Gender Wage Gap, A Report by the Councilof Economic Advisers, June 1998.
4 In 1962, an American, John Glenn, orbited the earth three times in the spacecraft Friendship 7. In 1969, two ofGlenn’s colleagues, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrich, were the first to walk on the moon.
5 U.S. Census Bureau.
6 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
7 Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother (New York, 1983), p. 194. Cowan continues: “The flat was to beoutfitted with a compete bathroom (hot and cold running water, toilet, bath, shower, and sink), a complete kitchen(sink with drain, hot and cold water, refrigerator, and a gas or electric range), and central heat. Plain but adequatefurnishings were allowed (each person was to have a bed and a complete set of eating utensils) as well as annualreplacement clothing for the children (shoes that fit, dresses that were new and not made over from hand-me-downs). The diet for such a family was not to contain luxurious foods such as steak, but did allow meat, milk, freshfruits, and vegetables to be served at least once a day. The family was allowed an iron and a vacuum cleaner(although not a washing machine or a dryer) and linoleum, not carpeting, to cover all floors. That set of materialconditions is doubly significant: first, because it was regarded as a deprivation in terms of the general standardapplying throughout the country in 1960; and, second, because it was luxurious in comparison with how peoplehad lived in earlier decades.”
8 According to the 1960 decennial census, the national average was 3.31 persons.
9 Records were made out of vinyl. “45s” (45 revolutions per minute, or rpm’s) usually had one song per side;“LPs,” (long playing, 33 revolutions per minute) had 10 to 20 songs on them. Both types of records were played ona phonograph or record player. Most phonographs in the 1960s could still play “78s,” which were consideredMom’s and Dad’s records by teens.
1 0 The November 2003 issue of MIT Technology Review has an article on the development of new uses for Teflon®,including as a waterproofing agent. A DuPont scientist who was studying refrigerants discovered this slipperyproduct “by mistake” in 1938. It became wildly popular in the 1960s as a coating for cooking pans. http://her-itage.dupont.com/
1 1 Thus, most U.S. households had a TV in time to view the Kennedy-Nixon presidential debates, a milestone inthis medium. Richard Nixon was far less photogenic, graceful, and relaxed on the small screen than was JohnKennedy. TV placed people under a microscope in a way that “voice alone” did not.
The GTO was a dream car of teenage boys in the1960s.Courtesy of General Motors CorporationUsed with permission, GM Media Archives
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1 2 Stanley Lebergott, Pursuing Happiness: American Consumers in the Twentieth Century.
1 3 http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/C/htmlC/colortelevis/colortelevis.htm
1 4 Prices for the 1960s are from the Hartford Courant for July 16, 1965. For conversions to today’s dollars, see WhatIs a Dollar Worth?, on the web site of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.http://woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us/research/data/us/calc/
15 Seventeen was first published in 1944.
1 6 In 1960, 41 percent of the total U.S. population had graduated from high school, and 8 percent had completedfour years of college. By 1970, the high school graduation number had risen to 55 percent, and those who hadattended four years of college, to 11 percent of the population (aged 25 years and over). National Center forEducational Statistics.
1 7 The minimum wage in 1961 was $1.15 per hour. In 1963, it was $1.25 per hour.http://www.ctdol.state.ct.us/wgwkstnd/history.htm
1 8 Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother (New York, 1983), pp. 196–200.
19 Many stores gave customers S&H Green Stamps equal to the dollar amount of their purchase. Customers filledup stamp books and then chose an item from the popular S&H Green Stamp catalog. The catalog displayed anddescribed items and noted how many stamp books were required to redeem (“purchase”) each item. Here is oneassessment of the popularity of S&H Green Stamps:
“Sperry & Hutchinson, distributor of S&H Green Stamps, was probably the most popular of quite a few com-peting stamp companies. Sperry & Hutchinson began offering stamps to retailers back in 1896. The retail organiza-tions bought the stamps from S&H and gave them as bonuses with every purchase based on the amount youbought. The more you bought, the more stamps you got. S&H made their money by selling the stamps to retailers.The tradeoff to the retailers was in customer loyalty. Customers flocked to stores that gave stamps. It was anextremely successful program. . . . It was estimated that 80 percent of U.S. households collected stamps of one sortor another, creating an annual market for S&H alone of about $825 million.” http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mgreenstamps.html
20 Both of these items are in the 1960s section of the Material Life exhibit in the Economic Adventure at theFederal Reserve Bank of Boston.
21 http://www.greenpoints.com/account/act_default.asp
22 http://www.eh.net/hmit/ppowerUSD/dollar_answser.php and University of Connecticut catalog for 1966–67.
Written by Melita Podesta, Project Coordinator, New England Economic Adventure, Federal ReserveBank of Boston, October 2004.